Extended version of https://github.com/xiag-ag/typescript-to-json-schema.
Inspired by YousefED/typescript-json-schema
. Here's the differences list:
- this implementation avoids the use of
typeChecker.getTypeAtLocation()
(so probably it keeps correct type aliases) - processing AST and formatting JSON schema have been split into two independent steps
- not exported types, interfaces, enums are not exposed in the
definitions
section in the JSON schema
This project is made possible by a community of contributors. We welcome contributions of any kind (issues, code, documentation, examples, tests,...). Please read our code of conduct.
Run the schema generator with npx:
npx ts-json-schema-generator --path 'my/project/**/*.ts' --type 'My.Type.Name'
Or install the package and then run it
npm install --save ts-json-schema-generator
./node_modules/.bin/ts-json-schema-generator --path 'my/project/**/*.ts' --type 'My.Type.Name'
Note that different platforms (e.g. Windows) may use different path separators so you may have to adjust the command above.
Also note that you need to quote paths with *
as otherwise the shell will expand the paths and therefore only pass the first path to the generator.
By default, the command-line generator will use the tsconfig.json
file in the current working directory, or the first parent directory that contains a tsconfig.json
file up to the root of the filesystem. If you want to use a different tsconfig.json
file, you can use the --tsconfig
option. In particular, if you need to use different compilation options for types, you may want to create a separate tsconfig.json
file for the schema generation only.
-p, --path <path> Source file path
-t, --type <name> Type name
-i, --id <name> $id for generated schema
-f, --tsconfig <path> Custom tsconfig.json path
-e, --expose <expose> Type exposing (choices: "all", "none", "export", default: "export")
-j, --jsDoc <extended> Read JsDoc annotations (choices: "none", "basic", "extended", default: "extended")
--markdown-description Generate `markdownDescription` in addition to `description`.
--functions <functions> How to handle functions. `fail` will throw an error. `comment` will add a comment. `hide` will treat the function like a NeverType or HiddenType.
(choices: "fail", "comment", "hide", default: "comment")
--minify Minify generated schema (default: false)
--unstable Do not sort properties
--strict-tuples Do not allow additional items on tuples
--no-top-ref Do not create a top-level $ref definition
--no-type-check Skip type checks to improve performance
--no-ref-encode Do not encode references
-o, --out <file> Set the output file (default: stdout)
--validation-keywords [value] Provide additional validation keywords to include (default: [])
--additional-properties Allow additional properties for objects with no index signature (default: false)
-V, --version output the version number
-h, --help display help for command
// main.js
const tsj = require("ts-json-schema-generator");
const fs = require("fs");
/** @type {import('ts-json-schema-generator/dist/src/Config').Config} */
const config = {
path: "path/to/source/file",
tsconfig: "path/to/tsconfig.json",
type: "*", // Or <type-name> if you want to generate schema for that one type only
};
const outputPath = "path/to/output/file";
const schema = tsj.createGenerator(config).createSchema(config.type);
const schemaString = JSON.stringify(schema, null, 2);
fs.writeFile(outputPath, schemaString, (err) => {
if (err) throw err;
});
Run the schema generator via node main.js
.
Extending the built-in formatting is possible by creating a custom formatter and adding it to the main formatter:
- First we create a formatter, in this case for formatting function types (note that there is a built in one):
// my-function-formatter.ts
import { BaseType, Definition, FunctionType, SubTypeFormatter } from "ts-json-schema-generator";
import ts from "typescript";
export class MyFunctionTypeFormatter implements SubTypeFormatter {
// You can skip this line if you don't need childTypeFormatter
public constructor(private childTypeFormatter: TypeFormatter) {}
public supportsType(type: BaseType): boolean {
return type instanceof FunctionType;
}
public getDefinition(type: FunctionType): Definition {
// Return a custom schema for the function property.
return {
type: "object",
properties: {
isFunction: {
type: "boolean",
const: true,
},
},
};
}
// If this type does NOT HAVE children, generally all you need is:
public getChildren(type: FunctionType): BaseType[] {
return [];
}
// However, if children ARE supported, you'll need something similar to
// this (see src/TypeFormatter/{Array,Definition,etc}.ts for some examples):
public getChildren(type: FunctionType): BaseType[] {
return this.childTypeFormatter.getChildren(type.getType());
}
}
- Then we add the formatter as a child to the core formatter using the augmentation callback:
import { createProgram, createParser, SchemaGenerator, createFormatter } from "ts-json-schema-generator";
import { MyFunctionTypeFormatter } from "./my-function-formatter.ts";
import fs from "fs";
const config = {
path: "path/to/source/file",
tsconfig: "path/to/tsconfig.json",
type: "*", // Or <type-name> if you want to generate schema for that one type only
};
// We configure the formatter an add our custom formatter to it.
const formatter = createFormatter(config, (fmt, circularReferenceTypeFormatter) => {
// If your formatter DOES NOT support children, e.g. getChildren() { return [] }:
fmt.addTypeFormatter(new MyFunctionTypeFormatter());
// If your formatter DOES support children, you'll need this reference too:
fmt.addTypeFormatter(new MyFunctionTypeFormatter(circularReferenceTypeFormatter));
});
const program = createProgram(config);
const parser = createParser(program, config);
const generator = new SchemaGenerator(program, parser, formatter, config);
const schema = generator.createSchema(config.type);
const outputPath = "path/to/output/file";
const schemaString = JSON.stringify(schema, null, 2);
fs.writeFile(outputPath, schemaString, (err) => {
if (err) throw err;
});
Similar to custom formatting, extending the built-in parsing works practically the same way:
- First we create a parser, in this case for parsing construct types:
// my-constructor-parser.ts
import { Context, StringType, ReferenceType, BaseType, SubNodeParser } from "ts-json-schema-generator";
// use typescript exported by TJS to avoid version conflict
import ts from "ts-json-schema-generator";
export class MyConstructorParser implements SubNodeParser {
supportsNode(node: ts.Node): boolean {
return node.kind === ts.SyntaxKind.ConstructorType;
}
createType(node: ts.Node, context: Context, reference?: ReferenceType): BaseType | undefined {
return new StringType(); // Treat constructors as strings in this example
}
}
- Then we add the parser as a child to the core parser using the augmentation callback:
import { createProgram, createParser, SchemaGenerator, createFormatter } from "ts-json-schema-generator";
import { MyConstructorParser } from "./my-constructor-parser.ts";
import fs from "fs";
const config = {
path: "path/to/source/file",
tsconfig: "path/to/tsconfig.json",
type: "*", // Or <type-name> if you want to generate schema for that one type only
};
const program = createProgram(config);
// We configure the parser an add our custom parser to it.
const parser = createParser(program, config, (prs) => {
prs.addNodeParser(new MyConstructorParser());
});
const formatter = createFormatter(config);
const generator = new SchemaGenerator(program, parser, formatter, config);
const schema = generator.createSchema(config.type);
const outputPath = "path/to/output/file";
const schemaString = JSON.stringify(schema, null, 2);
fs.writeFile(outputPath, schemaString, (err) => {
if (err) throw err;
});
interface
typesenum
typesunion
,tuple
,type[]
typesDate
,RegExp
,URL
typesstring
,boolean
,number
types"value"
,123
,true
,false
,null
,undefined
literals- type aliases
- generics
typeof
keyof
- conditional types
- functions
Promise<T>
unwraps toT
- Overrides (like
@format
)
npm run --silent run -- --path 'test/valid-data/type-mapped-array/*.ts' --type 'MyObject'
npm run --silent debug -- --path 'test/valid-data/type-mapped-array/*.ts' --type 'MyObject'
And connect via the debugger protocol.
AST Explorer is amazing for developers of this tool!
Publishing is handled by a 2-branch pre-release process, configured in publish-auto.yml
. All changes should be based off the default next
branch, and are published automatically.
- PRs made into the default branch are auto-deployed to the
next
pre-release tag on NPM. The result can be installed withnpm install ts-json-schema-generator@next
- When merging into
next
, please use thesquash and merge
strategy.
- When merging into
- To release a new stable version, open a PR from
next
intostable
using this compare link.- When merging from
next
intostable
, please use thecreate a merge commit
strategy.
- When merging from